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Ok this is frustrating...
I look up a translation of "My" and I get: mon, ma, mes, ma/à moi

I look up a translation of "Place" and I get: n. - endroit, lieu, place, position, maison, appartement, couvert, siège, (GB, Univ) place (dans un cours), place (compétition, course), (en premier) lieu, pour commencer, en place, à sa place, à la place de (qn, qch) dans, rôle, à ma/sa place, moment, page, fil (d'un discours), (US) quelque part, nulle part

HOW CAN I SAY: Visit My Place???????
thanks!

2006-08-20 23:36:03 · 12 answers · asked by wise and nuts 2 in Society & Culture Languages

12 answers

Viens chez moi (if it's a peer/friend/relative)
Venez chez moi (if it's more than one person and/or someone you don't know well)

And a translation tip or two: Try to look up the most specific word you can--"place" can mean anything, but "home" can't.
And mon, ma, and mes are all my, but it depends if the possessed object is masculine (mon), feminine (ma), or plural (mes)--except feminine nouns that start with a vowel are also "mon". But that's irrelevant in this case, because you just say "chez" rather than "ma maison" (my house).

Or you can say: Viens/venez me rendre visite.

2006-08-21 00:04:08 · answer #1 · answered by Goddess of Grammar 7 · 2 0

Come Over To My Place

2016-11-12 04:43:10 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Standard French? 1) Allez! 2) sans blague In Québec French: 1) Aweye 2) Wèyons (donc)

2016-03-17 00:32:58 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The answer before me is right. But Abuela something is wrong for the 2nd answer: you can't say Venez visiter chez moi (or whatever it is he wrote).

I'm French

2006-08-21 01:11:48 · answer #4 · answered by Offkey 7 · 0 0

Viens chez moi (order) or Veux-tu venir chez moi? (question)
Je t'invite à venir chez moi (invitation)

2006-08-21 07:22:07 · answer #5 · answered by fabee 6 · 0 0

Any person arranging on traveling to a Spanish-speaking country sometime in the up coming months or so have to make a course so that can make a dissent conversation in Spanish or just to comprehend when individuals speak to them simply because by the time your trip rolls close to you should be conversationally fluent or rather near to it with the support

2016-06-02 04:40:18 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I believe the phrase you're looking for is,

"Venez chez moi."

Hope this helps.

2006-08-20 23:44:59 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"Viens chez moi"
which would translate to "Come to my home" (chez is a word with many acceptations, the main one being home)
pronounced phoneticaly:
vee-eng-shay-mu-ah (said fast and all together)
or
"Viens me visiter chez moi".
Which would be "come visit me at my home" Both would be correct, the first one more in common use...and it's shorter...

2006-08-20 23:49:42 · answer #8 · answered by abuela Nany 6 · 0 2

Visiter, chez moi.

2006-08-20 23:43:29 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Viens voir ma place
Je vous envite pour visiter ma maison

2006-08-20 23:41:48 · answer #10 · answered by virgilio costa 3 · 0 2

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